English Department News

       

April 16, 2003

         

Volume 5, No. 29


 

 

Year-at-a-Glance Department Calendar
University Calendar
Graduate School Calendar
April 16 Faculty-Student Brown Bag Lunch - Foy 217 - 11:00 a.m.
April 16 Graduate Faculty Meeting - HC 3104 - 3:00 p.m.
April 17 Auburn/Tuskegee Poetry Reading - Pebble Hill - 7:00 p.m.
April 23 Faculty Meeting - HC 3104 - 3:00 p.m.
April 23 Great Flicks: Othello - HC 1203 - 7:00 p.m.
April 24 Ethnic Notions - HC 3309 - 1:00 p.m. (movie and discussion before Benson)
April 24 Benson Lecture - HC 3195 - 3:15 p.m.
May 1 English Department Dead Day Golf Tourney - Indian Pines Golf Course
May 1 Graduate Student Reception - Pebble Hill - 4:30 p.m.
The Year-at-a-Glance Department Calendar details the department activities for the year.

Auburn/Tuskegee Poetry Reading at Pebble Hill
Tomorrow at 7:00 p.m. an Auburn/Tuskegee Poetry Reading will be held at Pebble Hill. Undergraduates, Graduates, and Faculty from both institutions are all welcome to share their creative works. Food and drinks will be provided. The last time this event took place there were approximately 45 people in attendance, all of whom were incredibly creative individuals. The entirety of the night was enriching intellectually as well as socially. Come join this endeavor to create an open community of people with diverse feelings, ideals, and work. You may read or simply listen to creators from this and surrounding communities.

For questions or comments, e-mail Lauren Lang at langlau@auburn.edu.

W.T. "Rip" Lhamon to Deliver 2003 Benson Lecture
W. T. "Rip" Lhamon, the George M. Harper Professor of English at Florida State University, will deliver the 2003 Benson Lecture as part of the English department’s annual undergraduate awards ceremony. Professor Lhamon’s topic will be "Blackface Performance: You Can’t Tell Where You’re Going Until You Know Where You’ve Been."

The 2003 Benson Lecture is scheduled for Thursday, April 24, 2003 at 3:15 pm in 3195 Haley Center. The lecture will be free and open to the public. A reception for Professor Lhamon will follow his presentation.

In his lecture, Professor Lhamon will explore views of early race relations in the new Republic as evidenced through the minstrel show, an exploration that will show how the original performances relate to current American culture. His argument demonstrates how American culture is missing important evidence about white/black relations because it has repressed or forgotten the early enthusiastic attraction whites felt toward black culture before the minstrel show. 

Professor Lhamon’s scholarship includes the books Jump Jim Crow: Plays, Lyrics, and Street Prose of the First Atlantic Popular Culture (Forthcoming 2003), Raising Cain: Blackface Performance from Jim Crow to Hip Hop (1998), and Deliberate Speed: The Origins of A Cultural Style in the American Fifties (1990). 

Prior to the lecture, the film Ethnic Notions will be shown from 1:00 – 3:00 pm in 3309 Haley Center with discussion following. The film traces the evolution of Black American caricatures in cartoons, songs, and films, and the prejudice they fostered.

4th Annual English Department Dead Day Golf Tourney
It's time once again for our annual golf outing, which will be held at Indian Pines Golf Course on the morning of May 1. If a few hours of fun and frustration, collegial bonding, and end-of-term recreation are not enticing enough, remember that the sartorial splendor that is the Tweed Blazer awaits the winning team. Sign up by contacting Jon Bolton.

Graduate Student Reception
The department of English will host the annual reception honoring graduate students at Pebble Hill on Thursday, May 1, from 4:30-7:00 p.m.  Spouses of faculty, staff, and graduate students are warmly invited.  Drink and light buffet fare will be provided.  Staff members, graduate students, and their spouses will be the department's guests.  New EGO officers will be announced and department awards will be distributed.  Come to celebrate the ending of another successful semester! 

Each professional faculty member who plans to attend is encouraged to contribute $15, or $20 if your spouse is attending.  Checks should be made payable to Jeremy Downes. Let Jeremy Downes know by Wednesday, April 23 if you (and your guests) will be attending.  

Softball Schedule
Spring is here and softball season has begun!  Below is the softball season for Spring 2003. All games are at 5:00 p.m. on Fridays.  Anyone who shows up and wants to play will play.  See Frank Walters or someone who’s played before if you’re not sure how to find the fields.  Try to arrive at 4:45 to give yourself time to stretch and Frank time to see who’s available to play.  Come out and have some fun on the field or on the sidelines!

Date of Game Opposing Team Field Number
April 18 Industrial Engineering Field 7
April 25 Economics Field 6
May 2 Bio Systems Engineering Field 3

EGO Voting
Voting begins today for graduate students campaigning for positions on EGO executive board and department committees. Ballots will be in your box; follow the directions attached to the ballots.  Please contact Nate Meier if you have any questions.  

EGO Prom
Prom will be May 3 at 9:00 p.m. at Nate Meier's apartment.  Check your email for details and directions.  Contact Nate Meier if you would like to bring snacks.

Graduate Student Reception
The department of English will host the annual reception honoring graduate students at Pebble Hill on Thursday, May 1, from 4:30-7:00 p.m.  Spouses of faculty, staff, and graduate students are warmly invited.  Drink and light buffet fare will be provided.  Staff members, graduate students, and their spouses will be the department's guests.  New EGO officers will be announced and department awards will be distributed.  Come to celebrate the ending of another successful semester!  Let Jeremy Downes know by Wednesday, April 23 if you (and your guests) will be attending.  

Graduate Students Honored
Many of our department's graduate students have been recently recognized and honored by the university and beyond. Below is a listing of our students and their outstanding accomplishments.  

  • Jennifer Campbell was awarded one of three Harry Merriwether Fellowships for 2003-2004.  The fellowship pays a stipend of $4,000 for graduate study and dissertation work.  
  • Heather Vaughan was selected by the Graduate Student Council as one of the university's top ten Master's students.
  • Jerry Hinnen's presentation of his master's thesis, Every Item in This Machine Can Be Won, won second place in Oral Session I of the Humanities and Social Sciences division at the Student Research Forum. 
  • John Campbell and Paul Wamsted are co-recipients of the Betty Travis Naugle Annual Graduate Fellowship for Technical and Professional Communication.
  • Kelly Messerschmidt received the Department of English Academic Award in Technical and Professional Communication.
  • Angela Woods received the Birmingham Chapter of the Society for Technical Communication Academic Award for Excellence in Technical and Professional Communication.


English Department Announces Achievement Awards
The English Department is pleased to announce the following winners of its annual Undergraduate Achievement Awards. The students were selected on the basis of nominations received from the faculty and the students' academic records. Winners will be recognized at the Department's annual Benson Lecture on Thursday, April 24, at 3:00 in HC 3195.

  • Amy R. Greene: Mary Matherly Durant Award, awarded to a woman "of sound character who has demonstrated scholastic excellence."
  • John F. Marsella: James A. Kirkley Award, awarded to a sophomore or junior man "of good moral character who has received high grades in English."
  • Neil A. Costes: Mortar Board's Mildred Enloe Yates Award, awarded to an outstanding student who has completed at least 100 hours.
  • Jane C. Daugherty: Ruth and Carolyn Faulk Scholarship, awarded to a junior "of good moral character who has received good grades in English."

Tim Dykstal wishes to thank Dennis Rygiel and Marc Silverstein, this year's ad-hoc selection committee, for selecting the winners.

English Department Announces Writing Awards
The English Department is pleased to announce the following winners of its annual Undergraduate Writing Awards. Winners will be recognized at the Department's annual Benson Lecture on Thursday, April 24, at 3:00 in HC 3195.

We wish to thank all the students who entered this year's competition. There were many entries in each of the three categories, and many competitive entries that could not be recognized. All entries were evaluated blindly, with the names removed.

Academic Essay

Winner: Elizabeth A. Dillard, "Gray Hair: The Crown of Wisdom and the Mark of Forgetfulness."

Honorable Mention: Troy G. Woollen, "Medievalization, Modernization, and the Puzzle of Pandaras in Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde."

Creative Prose

Winner: Sarah C. Godwin, "Time."

Poetry

Winner: Amanda J. Watts, "Envy of Autumn."

Honorable Mention: Holley E. Gautney, "Before Bulimia."

Tim Dykstal wishes to thank this year's screeners and judges of the writing awards: Craig Bertolet, Diana Curtis, James Elston, Chris Keirstead, Margaret Kouidis, and Joe Walker.

Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum Association Fifteenth Annual Literary Contest
The Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum Association announces its 15th annual literary context. 1st and 2nd place winners will receive plaques and monetary rewards of the following amounts: College First Place Winners: $150 each; College Second Place Winners: $75 each.

Essays should be on any personal or literary topic. Subject matter for the short story category is completely open. Students may submit more than one entry. Mail your entry to:
Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum Assn., Inc., Literary Contest, PO Box 64, Montgomery, AL 36101-0064.  Deadline for entries is May 15, 2003.

 
  • Thomas Argiro presented a paper entitled "Dis-inhabited Being: Italian American Abjection in Faulkner's Mosquitoes and Sanctuary" at the 17th Annual MELUS conference held in Boca Raton, Florida, April 10-13, sponsored by Florida Atlantic University.  MELUS is the Society for the Study of the Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States.
  • The university has awarded a Competitive Research Grant to Kathryn Pratt for her work on melancholia and British Romantic culture.
  • Thomas Nunnally and his student Julie Zorn (English 7270 Structure of English, Fall 02) will be presenting papers at the Dictionary Society of North America meeting in Durham, NC, May 29-31.   Tom Nunnally is presenting "Why You Can't Ache All Over: Uneven Collocation of Ache with Body Parts," in which he explores the synchronic vagaries and diachronic development of lexical collocation with 'ache,' (e.g., tooth ache, but no gum ache) and assesses the ease of such research with CD ROM dictionaries. Julie Zorn is presenting "Making F.U.D.G.E: Testing Metcalf's Predictive Method for New-Word Success" in which she uses lexical frequency and chronological tests to check the validity of Alan Metcalf's methodology in his book Predicting New Words: The Secrets of Their Success (2002). Interestingly, Julie gives her paper right before Alan Metcalf presents his current research, so keep her in your thoughts! To read their abstracts and see the other interesting goings-on at DSNA, please check out www.duke.edu/web/linguistics and click on the DSNA button.
  • Charlie Rose, Associate Professor Emeritus from the department, has been writing steadily since his 1994 retirement.  His short story "D.T." was published in the Winter 2003 issue of Chicago Quarterly Review and the short story "Remission" appeared in the winter issue of Shenandoah.  His review of Charlotte Miller's novel, Through A Glass Darkly, appeared in The Montgomery Advertiser and The Chattenooga Times.  His review of Lynne Barrett's collection of short stories, "The Secret Names of Women," appeared in the Fall 2002 issue of First Draft: The Journal of the Alabama Writer's Forum. His review of John Williams' novel, Lake Moon, appeared in The Montgomery Advertiser. His review of Marlin Barton's collection of short stories, The Dry Well, appeared in the Winter 2003 issue of Southern Humanities Review. He read a short story at the 2003 Gulf Coast Association of Creative Writers Teachers Conference in Farehope.
STC April in Auburn a Success
The Birmingham Chapter of the Society for Technical Communication (STC) and the department of English met Saturday, April 12, at Auburn University for a day of workshops and networking.  Over 40 participants enjoyed sessions on the history of the technical communication profession, maneuvering through MS Word, creating e-portfolios, and knowledge harvesting.  Betsy Smith and Michelle Sidler were two of the presenters.  

During the lunch meeting of the Society, awards were distributed to MTPC students John Campbell, Paul Wamsted, Kelly Messerschmidt, and Angela Woods.  Also, Don Cunningham and Dan Wise, both members of the Birmingham STC chapter, were recognized as two of only eight fellows selected by STC for induction this May. 

Below are photos capturing the day's events.  


If you would like to include an item in the "Professional Notes" section of The English Channel, please submit your note to Betsy Smith or Alise Chabaud.

 

 

Please submit items and direct all questions or comments about The English Channel to Betsy Smith or Alise Chabaud.

To include an item in The English Channel, submit text items by Tuesday at 11:40 a.m. for publication Wednesday.  Submit items by email or by putting a note or disk in Alise Chabaud's mailbox (disks will be returned). If you submit an image on disk, please make sure that it can be edited to fit and be read clearly on the page. Items over fifty words in length should be submitted on disk or sent by email. Please check your submission for accuracy and completion--all calendar items and meeting announcements must include the date, time, and location of the event. Please omit all unusual formatting.